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Exposition Kengo Kuma

Marie-Ange Brayer - Commissaire Carr Saint-Vincent, Scne Nationale, Orlans 20 octobre - 23 dcembre 2006 Curator October 20 December 23, 2006

Entre libre du mardi au samedi de 13 h 19 h et les soirs de spectacle. Free entrance, from Tuesday to Saturday, 1pm to 7pm, and on performance nights. Jeudi 19 octobre 2006 18 h Vernissage Vendredi 20 octobre 2006 11 h 30 Confrence de Kengo Kuma au Carr Saint-Vincent Thursday October 19 at 6pm Opening Friday October 20, at 11.30am Lecture by Kengo Kuma, Carr Saint-Vincent
Kengo Kuma, Oribe Tea House, 2005.

N en 1954, Kengo Kuma fonde son agence en 1990 Tokyo (Kengo Kuma & Associates). Enseignant dans plusieurs universits, laurat de nombreux prix au Japon ainsi qu ltranger (Finlande, Italie), il a aujourdhui son actif plus dune cinquantaine de ralisations au Japon (maisons, logements, muses, magasins, etc) qui le placent parmi les architectes les plus importants de sa gnration. Son leitmotiv est effacer larchitecture, convoquer la quasi disparition de larchitecture dans son environnement, naturel ou urbain, en crant des structures ouvertes, permables aux variations de lextrieur, comme en tmoigne le Kitakami Canal Museum (Miyagi, 1996-99). Pour ses btiments quil revendique faibles, Kuma recourt des matriaux vernaculaires, terre, bois, bambou, pierre, mais surtout les pense selon des assemblages constructifs innovants. Ainsi son usage du washi, papier japonais, pour le Muse dAndo Hiroshige (Bato, 1998-2000) ou celui de la pierre pour le Stone Museum (Nasu, 1996-2000) dont la faade se transgure en claustra travers la rptition linaire de minces blocs de pierre. Limmeuble One Ometesando (Tokyo, 2001-03) est constitu dune succession de lamelles en bois, perpendiculaires la faade : peau continue, vue de biais, la faade devient, de face, compltement transparente, rythme de vides et de pleins. Le matriau est donc pour Kengo Kuma un principe de construction, do dcoulent lesthtique et la symbolique de larchitecture. Prsent dans les collections du FRAC Centre, il a particip aux ditions dArchiLab 2000, 2001 et 2002, et a ralis la scnographie de lexposition des collections du FRAC au Mori Art Museum Tokyo en 2004-05 (ArchiLab : New Experiments in Art, Architecture and the City). Cette exposition monographique est la premire qui lui est consacre en France.

Kengo Kuma Exhibition


Kengo Kuma was born in 1954, and set up his own agency in Tokyo in 1990 (Kengo Kuma & Associates). He teaches in several universities, and has won many prizes both in Japan and abroad (Finland, Italy). Today, he has some 50 buildings to his credit in Japan (houses, housing units, museums, shops, etc), putting him among the major architects of his generation. His leitmotiv is to erase architecture, and calls for the virtual disappearance of architecture in its environment, natural and urban alike, thanks to buildings coming across like open structures and changing with external variations, as attested to by the Kitakami Canal Museum (Miyagi, 199699). For his so-called weak buildings, Kuma uses vernacular materials, earth, wood, bamboo, and stone, but above all conceives of them as innovative constructive assemblies. Whence his use of washi, Japanese paper, for the Ando Hiroshige Museum (Bato, 1998-2000), and stone for the Stone Museum (Nasu, 1996-2000), whose faadeturns into an openwork structure through the linear repetition of thin stone blocks. The One Omotesando building (Tokyo, 2001-03) consists of a series of wooden strips, perpendicular to the faade: with its continuous skin, when seen obliquely, the faade, head on, becomes completely transparent, punctuated by voids and solids. For Kengo Kuma the material is thus always a construction principle, giving rise to the architectures aesthetics and symbolism. Featuring in the FRAC Centre collections, he took part in the 2000, 2001 and 2002 ArchiLab conferences and also also designed the set for the exhibition of the FRAC Centres collection ArchiLab : New Experiments in Art, Architecture and the City at the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo (2004-05). This exhibition is the rst monographic show devoted to Kengo Kuma in France.

Workshop
Installation dHitoshi Abe dans la cour dArchiLab, site des Subsistances Militaires 21 octobre 23 dcembre 2006 Du 5 au 13 juillet, un groupe dtudiants issus de plusieurs coles (IAV, Institut dArts Visuels dOrlans ; ENSNP, Ecole Nationale Suprieure de la Nature et du Paysage de Blois ; ESA, Ecole Spciale dArchitecture de Paris) mnera un workshop avec larchitecte Hitoshi Abe qui donnera lieu une installation dans la cour dArchiLab. Hitoshi ABE N en 1962, Hitoshi Abe est diplm de SCI-Arc Los Angeles en 1989. Il travaille dans lagence de Coop Himmelb(l)au de 1988 1992 et fonde lAtelier Hitoshi Abe en 1992 dans sa ville natale, Senda. Il obtient un doctorat en architecture en 1993 et devient en 2002 professeur la Tohoku University. En 2000, il construit un stade Senda qui le fait reconnatre au Japon. Hitoshi Abe dveloppe aussi des systmes de construction temporaire, combinant des matriaux ordinaires. Ses ralisations sintgrent naturellement au paysage soulignant la dimension du transitoire (Miyagi Water Tower, 1994 ; YG Ribbon House, 1999 ou I-House, 2001, en forme de ruban de Mbius ; Sugano Museum, 2004). Installation of Hitoshi Abe in ArchiLab courtyard, site des Subsistances Militaires October 21 - December 23, 2006 From 5 to 13 July, 2006, a group of students from several schools (IAV, Institute of Visual Arts, Orleans ; ENSNP, Advanced National School of Nature and Landscape, Blois ; ESA, Special School of Architecture, Paris) will run a workshop with the architect Hitoshi Abe. The end product will be an installation in the ArchiLab courtyard. Hitoshi ABE Hitoshi Abe was born in 1962 and graduated from SCI-Arc in Los Angeles in 1989. Between 1988 and 1992 he worked at the Coop Himmelb(l)au Agency, before creating the Atelier Hitoshi Abe in 1992 in Sendai, the city where he was born. He obtained a PhD in architecture in 1993, and in 2002 became professor at Tohoku University. In 2000, he built a stadium at Sendai which earned him much acclaim in Japan. Hitoshi Abe is also developing temporary construction systems, combining ordinary materials. His works are naturally incorporated in the landscape thereby emphasizing their transitory dimension (Miyagi Water Tower, 1994 ; YG Ribbon House, Miyagi, 1999, and the I-House, 2001, in the form of a Moebius strip; Sugano Museum, 2004).

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